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Steelworkers to strike over Tata plans to close Port Talbot blast furnaces

Tata will close the blast furnaces in September in a move that will see 2,800 job losses across its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ operations

Port Talbot steelworks(Image: PA)

Workers at Tata in Port Talbot are to strike after the company ended negotiations over changes to the business which will result in 2,800 direct job losses. Negotiations between unions and the Indian steel giant have today ended at a meeting in London, formally closing any chance of an alternative plan put forward by unions being adopted.

The company will end blast furnace steel production at the Port Talbot plant and will build a £1.25bn electric arc furnace, recycling scrap steel. The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government has contributed £500,000 grant towards the plan saying it was the only way to secure any jobs.

We understand the company will close blast furnace five in June and blast furnace four in September. Tata says that its plan will be the largest investment in the country's steel industry in decades and secure the future of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ steelmaking, protecting the "majority" of jobs and reduce the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's carbon emissions. But they say it is not viable.

"However, the unions' own analysis shows their proposal would cost the company at least an additional £1.6bn when it is already losing £1million a day. Their plans are also high risk and would jeopardise the transition to green steel making,"

A ballot of Unite members, said to total 1,500 across Port Talbot and Llanwern, has already taken place with industrial action being one option. Now, as talks with the company have broken down, the union has said strikes will be announced soon.

A ballot of Community members, the biggest union of workers at the site, is ongoing with a result expected on May 9. The GMB is also consulting its members. No strike action is expected before all the members in all unions have voted.

Community's national Officer for Steel Alun Davies said: "This is an incredibly disappointing day for Tata steelworkers who have been betrayed by a company which owes them so much. It is disgraceful that Tata Steel have chosen to pursue a discredited, bargain basement deal over a viable plan for decarbonisation which would protect jobs and preserve the country's primary steelmaking capacity."

"I know that many of our members will be feeling dejected and anxious today, so it's vital we stick together to look after one another in these uncertain times. It's also vital that we take a stand together and send a message to Tata that we will not go quietly into the night. As someone who has had the privilege of working at Port Talbot and Llanwern, I know first-hand how steel is part of our lifeblood here in south Wales. If the company think that we'll let them trample over our industry and our communities now, they really don't know us at all."